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People-Centered Access to Justice and the Tribunal System

This A2J blog examines several provincial and federal tribunals in Canada for their alignment with concepts generally associated with “people-centered justice”. The tribunals included in this blog are each differently situated in the tribunal system. They are not representative of other provincial or federal tribunals, or other tribunals in Canada with similar mandates. For clarity,

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Caregiver Access to Justice in Canada: Addressing the Challenges Faced by Migrant Workers

Introduction Canada has long relied on migrant workers to fill gaps in the labour market, particularly for jobs related to domestic work. Since the end of the Second World War, tens of thousands of individuals, predominantly women from the Global South, have come to Canada to fulfill vital caregiving roles. As of 2021, there are

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A Whole of Government and Cross-Institutional Perspective on Legal Aid

One of the take-aways from a recent OECD meeting on People-Centered and Accessible Justice was that a whole of government approach is key for planning and implementing cohesive reforms and ensuring that institutional boundaries do not limit justice (Tatyana Teplova, Executive Leader in Governance and Policy, OECD, “Making People-Centered Justice Happen to Strengthen Democracy and

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CFCJ at the 2023 OECD Global Roundtable on Equal Access to Justice

Ab Currie, Senior Research Fellow at CFCJ, represented the CFCJ at the 2023 OECD Global Roundtable on Equal Access to Justice: Making People-Centered Justice Happen in Ljubljana, Slovenia, December 6 to 8, 2023. The meeting included two technical workshops, one on “Building Evidence for People-Centered Justice” and a second on “Access to Justice for Children

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Fifty Percent of Canadians with Civil and Administrative Legal Problems are in the Justice Gap

According to the World Justice Project’s (WJP) Justice Data Graphical Report I (2023), among the more than 40% of adult Canadians experiencing at least one non-trivial civil or administrative legal problem, 50% are in the justice gap. This means that 50% of the people experiencing legal problems also experienced one or more dimensions of the

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Access to Civil Justice for the Victims of Family Violence

Family violence, formerly known as “domestic violence”, is an all-too-common problem for all too many Canadians. In 2021, over 127,000 people reported being the victims of family violence, receiving physical or mental abuse from their spouse, parents, children, siblings, or extended family members. And these numbers only reflect the instances of police-reported violence. Fearing retaliation,

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